The Bookseller - 31.08.12 | Bookseller Staff
The writer, whose new novel NW was released by Hamish Hamilton on Monday, was speaking in an interview with Richard Bacon on BBC Radio 5 Live yesterday.
Smith said libraries were essential to providing an “equality of opportunity”, and said: “A library is the most simple and open way to give people access to books.” Talking about her own career as novelist, she said: “I owe my whole life to books and libraries. The library was a place I went to to find out was there was to know.”
She said that the internet could never be a rival for what libraries offered, because the way it ordered information was different.
Smith’s first novel, White Teeth (Penguin), won a clutch of awards, while her second, On Beauty (Penguin), was nominated for the Man Booker Prize and won the Orange Prize for Fiction.
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